In the criminal justice world, there are times when homicide is a non-punishable offense. Say for instance, if your life is in imminent danger and you protect yourself. The legal dictionary defines justifiable homicide as: "a killing without evil or criminal intent, for which there can be no blame, such as self-defense to protect oneself or to protect another, or the shooting by a law enforcement officer in fulfilling his/her duties" (The People's Law Dictionary. S.v. "Justifiable homicide." Retrieved 9/9/2013 from http://legaldictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Justifiable+homicide).
I submit to you today that there is a justifiable homicide that must take place each and everyday in the life of the believer. Galatians 5:24 says this: "And those who belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with its passions
and desires." The verb is in the aorist tense which denotes a once and for all action. Think of the imagery here. Think of how painful a crucifixion is. Now, think of how difficult it is for us as Christians to walk the narrow path, the sacrifices that we must make, the things that we are to separate ourselves from.
So, why does this once and for all action not result in instant perfection? I mean, if we have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires, why is it that the flesh continues to operate? The Romans designed crucifixion to induce maximum pain and slow death. It was not intended for one to die instantly, but to drag the process of death out. Many hung on crosses for days before finally succumbing to death. So, while the flesh has been crucified, it is stubborn and does not die easily! That's the most frustrating thing about trying to live a holy life but it is also a reminder that the one Who began the good work will also bring it to completion.
Because the flesh is slow to die and because sin is constantly trying to find a breach in the armor, this is something that we must do every day. We must put the flesh on the cross each and every day that we wake up. It is justifiable homicide because the flesh is set against the Spirit and is therefore in direct contradiction with God. The flesh and the carnal mindset is set on death and therefore we must crucify it before it kills us! If we follow the passions and desires of the flesh which only seeks to gratify itself, we will eventually be led to destruction. We are told by Jesus that we must pick our cross up every day (Luke 9:23). Although we are created in God's image, sin has distorted the image and the flesh is in constant rebellion against the Living God.
Don't take this as some sort of legalism or works based religiosity. The flesh does not always, as we have been conditioned to think, have to do with sex. We might have a desire to do harm to our neighbor or to lie to stay out of trouble, or share the latest gossip...the word flesh is not always pertaining to sex. Passions and desires are simply strong emotions and depending on the motivation for those emotions, they can be negative or positive. Here, we are talking in the negative sense because it is the flesh or the sinful nature that creates these passions. If God is the motivating force behind a passion or a desire, then it is by default positive because God is always good and God cannot tempt us to sin (James 1:13).
So, how do I put the flesh on the cross every day? How difficult will it be? Well, that depends on who is doing the crucifying. If I try to do it in my own strength, it will never happen. Although the verb is in the active voice, we cannot do this alone. The active voice means that it is an action that is completed by the subject so we must take the initiative to carry the act of crucifying the flesh out but the true renewal comes from God's Spirit. We crucify the flesh by "walking by the Spirit" (Galatians 5:16). Walking simply means the way that we live our life. We are to live life submitted to the Holy Spirit and walk according to His guidance. When we do that, the Holy Spirit is able to steer us away from sin, away from danger and keep us from gratifying the desires of the flesh. The verb walk in verse 16 is active but it is also imperative! We MUST walk by the Spirit if we have any hope of crucifying the flesh. We have to live in submission to the Spirit at all times. Will we mess it up at times? Yes, but we have to be active participant in walking by the Spirit.
Let me share something with you about the flesh, it will not die as long as we keep it on life support. As long as we throw the flesh a bone every now and then, it will remain content and exert as much influence as we allow. We feed our desires through what we consume visually and audibly and the temptation that we give in to. When the Holy Spirit is speaking, don't shut Him out! When there is something that you know is arousing or stimulating to the flesh, remove it or remove yourself. My prayer is that we all would become increasingly obedient and submissive to the Holy Ghost. Grace and Peace my brothers and sisters, in Jesus name!
Ephesians 4:20-24 (NASB) But you did not learn Christ in this way, if indeed you have heard Him and have been taught in Him, just as truth is in Jesus, that, in reference to your former manner of life, you lay aside the old self, which is being corrupted in accordance with the lusts of deceit, and that you be renewed in the spirit of your mind, and put on the new self, which in the likeness of God has been created in righteousness and holiness of the truth.
Tuesday, September 10, 2013
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
Limited Faith, Unlimited God
Haitus over, lol. Sorry for the drought but I have been in a holding pattern lately. Not that I haven't had things on my mind but I haven't had the time to blog! My job has exploded and I spend most of my days with someone in my face asking for something. This particular post has been marinating for a while.
In the sixth chapter of Mark's gospel, Jesus returns home to Nazareth and when we look at the parallel gospel accounts in Matthew and Luke, we can begin to see the details of this event. He came to the synagogue to teach as was His custom. He took the scroll of the prophet Isaiah and read from what we now know as the 61st chapter. He read these words (Luke 4:18,19):
"The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me because He has anointed me to bring the good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, and to proclaim the favorable year of the Lord."
He followed this by saying "today, this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing". By reading this particular scripture, Jesus was essentially saying that He was God! The different gospel accounts all say something similar. Initially the people spoke well of Jesus. They claimed that he did all things well and he spoke with power and authority. But then in Mark's gospel, they sort of turned on Him. They began to question His genealogy saying that He was the son of the carpenter, by saying that his mother and his brothers and sisters were among them and by basically refusing to recognize His deity. Reading Luke further, you can see why they started tripping. He basically called them out for their faithlessness and they eventually drove him to the brink of a cliff before he walked through them without being touched.
The Jews were expecting the Messiah to come as a military conqueror considering the fact that they were oppressed by the Romans. Prior to this period they were under the thumb of the Egyptians, the Midianites, the Babylonians and/or the Assyrians. They were looking for an earthly redemption but Moses said that God would send a prophet from among them (Deuteronomy 18).
It is easy to get into a self-help gospel and start talking about the people's perception of Jesus but their perception had nothing to do with anything. He lived among them for His entire life. He undoubtedly worked among them as an apprentice to Joseph (for a great read, check out "The Hidden Years at Nazareth" by G. Campbell Morgan) and He worshipped with them every Sabbath in the synagogue. Nazareth was a poor place with a bad reputation so there was no way that anyone could afford to look down their nose at anyone. The consternation regarding who Jesus was kin to was less about their perception of Him and more of an excuse for their unbelief! They were not interested in Jesus as God, they wanted to see a sign or a work.
Their refusal to follow the evidence caused them to get hung up on the circumstantial. Jesus did things that have never been done since the beginning of time (see John 9) i.e. open blind eyes, and unstop deaf ears. It was evident that He did not work on His own initiative and He even said he same on many occasions (John 5:19).
The passage that He read was also very telling. The favorable year of the Lord is the Jubilee year (see Leviticus 25). In the Jubilee year, the 50th year after 7 sabbaticals (every 7th year was a sabbatical year where the land was left fallow and no planting took place) several things happened: ALL slaves were freed, all dispossessed people were given their land back and more importantly, anyone that owed any debt was freed from their obligation to pay! Let's put this in terms of salvation: the Jubilee year that Jesus ushered in represented the cancelling of the sin debt of all who would trust Jesus as Savior! Jesus ushered in the year of God's favor by coming to cancel the debt to God that our sins created!
However, the unbelief of the people was so deep that they caused Jesus to marvel! These people made Jesus say, "wow!" Don't get me wrong, Jesus is 100% God and is omniscient, but the human side of the hypostatic union had to certainly shake His head in disbelief. Because of their unbelief, the bible says that he could do no miracles there! He laid His hands on a few sick people. Does this mean that Christ was limited? Absolutely NOT! The inability of Jesus to perform any miracles had more to do with the people not believing enough to come to Him. God has unlimited power. The first five chapters of Mark's gospel are full of miracles. So much so that Jesus' fame spread throughout all the land (Mark 1:28). These people were in the immediate presence of the Unlimited God but their faith was so limited that He did not do there what He had done in other places.
Luke's account tells of Jesus saying to the people, "you will no doubt say to Me, physician, heal yourself...do here what you have done elsewhere..." and Jesus made mention of Gentile people that received God's grace in lieu of Israelites that could have received the same thing.
God can do anything that He wants to, but God operates in faith. When we persist in unbelief and refuse to follow the evidence that God is who He says He is, we bind ourselves and limit God to what we think He can do. We put God in a box when He is so much greater! If there is something that you are dealing with and you are having issues with faith, it is my prayer that you would check God's record and see that He has never failed. Don't bind God up with bandages of unbelief! Don't limit God to only what your mind has the ability to conceptualize. Let God be God and the rest will work together for the good. Grace and peace!
In the sixth chapter of Mark's gospel, Jesus returns home to Nazareth and when we look at the parallel gospel accounts in Matthew and Luke, we can begin to see the details of this event. He came to the synagogue to teach as was His custom. He took the scroll of the prophet Isaiah and read from what we now know as the 61st chapter. He read these words (Luke 4:18,19):
"The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me because He has anointed me to bring the good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, and to proclaim the favorable year of the Lord."
He followed this by saying "today, this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing". By reading this particular scripture, Jesus was essentially saying that He was God! The different gospel accounts all say something similar. Initially the people spoke well of Jesus. They claimed that he did all things well and he spoke with power and authority. But then in Mark's gospel, they sort of turned on Him. They began to question His genealogy saying that He was the son of the carpenter, by saying that his mother and his brothers and sisters were among them and by basically refusing to recognize His deity. Reading Luke further, you can see why they started tripping. He basically called them out for their faithlessness and they eventually drove him to the brink of a cliff before he walked through them without being touched.
The Jews were expecting the Messiah to come as a military conqueror considering the fact that they were oppressed by the Romans. Prior to this period they were under the thumb of the Egyptians, the Midianites, the Babylonians and/or the Assyrians. They were looking for an earthly redemption but Moses said that God would send a prophet from among them (Deuteronomy 18).
It is easy to get into a self-help gospel and start talking about the people's perception of Jesus but their perception had nothing to do with anything. He lived among them for His entire life. He undoubtedly worked among them as an apprentice to Joseph (for a great read, check out "The Hidden Years at Nazareth" by G. Campbell Morgan) and He worshipped with them every Sabbath in the synagogue. Nazareth was a poor place with a bad reputation so there was no way that anyone could afford to look down their nose at anyone. The consternation regarding who Jesus was kin to was less about their perception of Him and more of an excuse for their unbelief! They were not interested in Jesus as God, they wanted to see a sign or a work.
Their refusal to follow the evidence caused them to get hung up on the circumstantial. Jesus did things that have never been done since the beginning of time (see John 9) i.e. open blind eyes, and unstop deaf ears. It was evident that He did not work on His own initiative and He even said he same on many occasions (John 5:19).
The passage that He read was also very telling. The favorable year of the Lord is the Jubilee year (see Leviticus 25). In the Jubilee year, the 50th year after 7 sabbaticals (every 7th year was a sabbatical year where the land was left fallow and no planting took place) several things happened: ALL slaves were freed, all dispossessed people were given their land back and more importantly, anyone that owed any debt was freed from their obligation to pay! Let's put this in terms of salvation: the Jubilee year that Jesus ushered in represented the cancelling of the sin debt of all who would trust Jesus as Savior! Jesus ushered in the year of God's favor by coming to cancel the debt to God that our sins created!
However, the unbelief of the people was so deep that they caused Jesus to marvel! These people made Jesus say, "wow!" Don't get me wrong, Jesus is 100% God and is omniscient, but the human side of the hypostatic union had to certainly shake His head in disbelief. Because of their unbelief, the bible says that he could do no miracles there! He laid His hands on a few sick people. Does this mean that Christ was limited? Absolutely NOT! The inability of Jesus to perform any miracles had more to do with the people not believing enough to come to Him. God has unlimited power. The first five chapters of Mark's gospel are full of miracles. So much so that Jesus' fame spread throughout all the land (Mark 1:28). These people were in the immediate presence of the Unlimited God but their faith was so limited that He did not do there what He had done in other places.
Luke's account tells of Jesus saying to the people, "you will no doubt say to Me, physician, heal yourself...do here what you have done elsewhere..." and Jesus made mention of Gentile people that received God's grace in lieu of Israelites that could have received the same thing.
God can do anything that He wants to, but God operates in faith. When we persist in unbelief and refuse to follow the evidence that God is who He says He is, we bind ourselves and limit God to what we think He can do. We put God in a box when He is so much greater! If there is something that you are dealing with and you are having issues with faith, it is my prayer that you would check God's record and see that He has never failed. Don't bind God up with bandages of unbelief! Don't limit God to only what your mind has the ability to conceptualize. Let God be God and the rest will work together for the good. Grace and peace!
Saturday, June 29, 2013
Where Did We Go Wrong?
Have you ever found it difficult to talk to someone about God? You know, someone that is down on their luck, someone in a bind, someone in trouble...and what you have to offer them might not meet their immediate needs? I have been here before. Why do you think that is? Mainly because when we talk about God, we speak of One that no man has seen or can see (1 Tim 6:16; John 1:18; 1 John 4:12) and at that moment the person in question might just need something tangible. Let me ask this, have you ever felt that offering God to someone was simply not adequate...like, "I wish there was something more that I could give?"
I have felt this way at times and I often wondered why. It dawned on me that the reason we feel so inadequate is because we focus on the physical needs of people without ever wondering if their soul is saved. We want to come with a package deal of an instant fix and salvation at the same time. This is because we live in a consumer driven society and really, no one wants to merely hear words- they want something else with it. Surely, mission work, feeding the poor, assistance for the downtrodden, helps ministries, etc. are a vital part of the church but the first mission of the church is to preach the gospel.
I submit today that, in many cases, Christianity has shifted from giving those in need the hope of a resurrection to a "self-help" genie-in-a-bottle mentality and it has people looking for stuff rather than looking for God. Hebrews 6:19 says that the "hope" is an anchor for the soul. 1 Peter 1:3,4 says this those that have accepted Christ are given a "living hope" with the promise of an incorruptible, unfading inheritance that is stored up in heaven. 1 Corinthians 15:19 sums it all up neatly, " If only for this life we have hope in Christ, we are of all people most to be pitied." These three scriptures remind us not to store up treasure here on earth nor to promise those that we are trying to lead to Christ that treasure! These scriptures remind us that the old soldiers of the faith did not look on the things that were temporary but to those things that are eternal! They tell us that the hope is not of houses, cars, great jobs or boatloads of money...the hope that was promised was the hope of a resurrection and eternal life.
Old Christians had a singular focus...heaven. They lived as "sojourners" by faith knowing that this was not the final destination. Let's see what Hebrews 11 has to say and be encouraged by it:
Hebrews 11: 13-16 "All these people were still living by faith when they died. They did not receive the things promised; they only saw them and welcomed them from a distance, admitting that they were foreigners and strangers on earth. People who say such things show that they are looking for a country of their own. If they had been thinking of the country they had left, they would have had opportunity to return. Instead, they were longing for a better country—a heavenly one. Therefore God is not ashamed to be called their God, for he has prepared a city for them."
This is one powerful passage of scripture that smashes the whole theology of consumerism and accumulation. These people looked to the true purpose of their redemption, heaven! Many died or were martyred before ever seeing what God had promised them. There is a final salvation saved up for the last days where Christ will return and gather up all of his children (1 Peter 1:9). Peter says it best when he tells those that he's writing to that "though you don't see Him, you love Him..." Can we get back to that? Can we love God although we don't physically "see" him [although the earth speaks of Him every day, see Psalms 19, Romans 1]. While these folks were awaiting heaven, they weren't sitting idly by either! They were loving one another, helping each other, meeting together to exhort one another (Hebrews 10:23-26) and in the process, spreading the gospel to the world, even at the expense of their own lives. They were loving their neighbors telling them the good news, that one day all suffering will end for those that are in Christ! They were giving the gospel and introducing people to Jesus because they did not have silver or gold to give (Acts 3:6)! They were sharing the "worlds goods" (1 John 3:17) with one another as they had need (Acts 4:32-37).
So, don't fall into the trap of consumerism. Are there blessings associated with following the Lord? Absolutely. But that's not why we signed up, at least that should not have been our motivation. I accepted Christ because I realized that my soul was in peril and there was no way that I could pay the debt that my sins had created. That's what drew me to Christ, knowing that he paid my sin debt in full and that I couldn't pay it no matter what I offered! That's what we need to get back to; saving souls and fixing our eyes on things above, not on the things of the earth (Colossians 3:2). If it is possible to assist someone with a needs, please do not hesitate to do so but never feel like God is not enough or that merely witnessing to someone about His goodness is inadequate. He is more than enough. He earned the name Jireh because He is the Great Provider. He blesses those that follow Him (Psalm 84:11) but the primary goal of the believer should be heaven, not material blessings. Hope in those things that we cannot see (Romans 8:25) and be steadfast and immovable, always abounding in the works of the Lord knowing that our labor is not in vain (1 Corinthians 15:58). May the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and peace that surpasses all understanding be with you all.
I have felt this way at times and I often wondered why. It dawned on me that the reason we feel so inadequate is because we focus on the physical needs of people without ever wondering if their soul is saved. We want to come with a package deal of an instant fix and salvation at the same time. This is because we live in a consumer driven society and really, no one wants to merely hear words- they want something else with it. Surely, mission work, feeding the poor, assistance for the downtrodden, helps ministries, etc. are a vital part of the church but the first mission of the church is to preach the gospel.
I submit today that, in many cases, Christianity has shifted from giving those in need the hope of a resurrection to a "self-help" genie-in-a-bottle mentality and it has people looking for stuff rather than looking for God. Hebrews 6:19 says that the "hope" is an anchor for the soul. 1 Peter 1:3,4 says this those that have accepted Christ are given a "living hope" with the promise of an incorruptible, unfading inheritance that is stored up in heaven. 1 Corinthians 15:19 sums it all up neatly, " If only for this life we have hope in Christ, we are of all people most to be pitied." These three scriptures remind us not to store up treasure here on earth nor to promise those that we are trying to lead to Christ that treasure! These scriptures remind us that the old soldiers of the faith did not look on the things that were temporary but to those things that are eternal! They tell us that the hope is not of houses, cars, great jobs or boatloads of money...the hope that was promised was the hope of a resurrection and eternal life.
Old Christians had a singular focus...heaven. They lived as "sojourners" by faith knowing that this was not the final destination. Let's see what Hebrews 11 has to say and be encouraged by it:
Hebrews 11: 13-16 "All these people were still living by faith when they died. They did not receive the things promised; they only saw them and welcomed them from a distance, admitting that they were foreigners and strangers on earth. People who say such things show that they are looking for a country of their own. If they had been thinking of the country they had left, they would have had opportunity to return. Instead, they were longing for a better country—a heavenly one. Therefore God is not ashamed to be called their God, for he has prepared a city for them."
This is one powerful passage of scripture that smashes the whole theology of consumerism and accumulation. These people looked to the true purpose of their redemption, heaven! Many died or were martyred before ever seeing what God had promised them. There is a final salvation saved up for the last days where Christ will return and gather up all of his children (1 Peter 1:9). Peter says it best when he tells those that he's writing to that "though you don't see Him, you love Him..." Can we get back to that? Can we love God although we don't physically "see" him [although the earth speaks of Him every day, see Psalms 19, Romans 1]. While these folks were awaiting heaven, they weren't sitting idly by either! They were loving one another, helping each other, meeting together to exhort one another (Hebrews 10:23-26) and in the process, spreading the gospel to the world, even at the expense of their own lives. They were loving their neighbors telling them the good news, that one day all suffering will end for those that are in Christ! They were giving the gospel and introducing people to Jesus because they did not have silver or gold to give (Acts 3:6)! They were sharing the "worlds goods" (1 John 3:17) with one another as they had need (Acts 4:32-37).
So, don't fall into the trap of consumerism. Are there blessings associated with following the Lord? Absolutely. But that's not why we signed up, at least that should not have been our motivation. I accepted Christ because I realized that my soul was in peril and there was no way that I could pay the debt that my sins had created. That's what drew me to Christ, knowing that he paid my sin debt in full and that I couldn't pay it no matter what I offered! That's what we need to get back to; saving souls and fixing our eyes on things above, not on the things of the earth (Colossians 3:2). If it is possible to assist someone with a needs, please do not hesitate to do so but never feel like God is not enough or that merely witnessing to someone about His goodness is inadequate. He is more than enough. He earned the name Jireh because He is the Great Provider. He blesses those that follow Him (Psalm 84:11) but the primary goal of the believer should be heaven, not material blessings. Hope in those things that we cannot see (Romans 8:25) and be steadfast and immovable, always abounding in the works of the Lord knowing that our labor is not in vain (1 Corinthians 15:58). May the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and peace that surpasses all understanding be with you all.
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
The God of a Second Chance
All of us saved folks are reclamation projects. Many of been stepped over, put down, puffed up, abused, neglected...you name it, many of us have experienced it. What I love about God is that God specializes in taken the things that are broken by the sinfulness of the world and restoring them to where He wants them to be. God specializes in giving second chances.
In John 5, there is a very familiar story about a man at the pool of Bethesda. The man had been there for 38 years on a mat. This pool was sometimes troubled by an "angel of the Lord" such that anyone that got into it during the time of the "troubling" was healed, no matter what was wrong with them. John recounts the story of this man and how Jesus gave him a second chance.
One day, Jesus came to the pool and to this man specifically and asked him a very pointed question: "Do you want to be made well?" What we see here is Jesus, God incarnate, was unafraid to confront sin and sin's effects. Jesus always went to the heart of the matter- he never treats the symptoms, he always attacks the root. Here is Jesus at Bethesda, the "house of mercy" where all of the sick people were. I can see a scene in my mind of this being a place where the castaways of society were; an ancient "skid row" if you would. We see our Lord meeting this man where we was! Jesus will do the same thing for us. He will meet us where we are because He totally understands the depravity of man and the pervasiveness of sin.
Let's analyze this man's second chance and let's see what God is saying to us through this scripture.
First of all, we see that the second chance is personal. Verse 6: "When Jesus saw him lying there and knew that he had already been there a long time, he said to him, “Do you want to be healed?”"
Jesus asked point blank, "Do YOU want to be healed?" Let's analyze this. Jesus knew of this man’s condition and how long he had been sick. The verb "want" or "desire" depending on the translation is written in the active voice in the Greek text. It would be up to the man to accept what Jesus was offering. He would have to be an active participant in what was happening, not a bystander. It was up to the sick man to make a move. If we put ourselves in the place of this man, every one of us has been here and we've had mixed results. Sometimes we have willingly accepted what God was offering and sometimes we have waffled. What Jesus was saying to this man is this: Do you want a second chance?
Secondly, the second chance is immediate. Verse 7-9 "The sick man answered him, “Sir, I have no one to put me into the pool when the water is stirred up, and while I am going another steps down before me.” Jesus said to him, “Get up, take up your bed, and walk.” And at once the man was healed, and he took up his bed and walked."
Ok, so Jesus asks, "Do you want to be healed?" This man offer up a litany of excuses as to why he's never been in the pool! People have stepped over me, no one will help me, blah, blah, blah. Notice he says "while I am going" in verse 8. In other words, he's been on his way...for 38 years. Now, pardon me for seeming insensitive, but this guy has been here for 38 years and he is obviously close enough for folks to step over him and enter the water. What this man has is what many of us suffered from before we met Jesus. He has an "on my way" mentality. You know, "I'm on my way to church." "I will come next week, but I can't make it this week...I don't have a ride." "I'll get saved tomorrow..." "I know that grandma is praying for me so I'm good..." Blah, blah, blah. This man made excuses. If he had moved a foot per year, he could have at least gotten to the point where he could have dipped his finger into the water. There had to be someone that brought him food and water every day. He had to have a caretaker somewhere that could've gotten him to the pool, IF he really wanted to get there.
Jesus, in response to this story about who did what, did not even give it a second thought. He simply said: "Get up, pick up your mat and walk." GET UP! Stop building monuments made up of empty excuses and get up! Stop looking for the angel when the Lord is standing right next to you, get up! Verse 9 says that the man got up "immediately". I give him credit here because he was obedient to the command of the Lord and he got up! He didn't think twice about it. Contrary to many "preachers" who beat this man up for not having faith...he actually had to have faith to respond to the offering of Jesus here!
Every healing that Jesus performed had immediate results. Can we take this further, if this man represents the power of sin over one's life and the power of sin to paralyze us; his healing represents the immediate cleansing and salvation that comes from accepting Jesus! Once we accept Christ, His righteousness becomes our righteousness. We are redeemed from the power of sin. We are free from the bondage of sin and we are able to walk when before we were crippled by sin's effects!
Thirdly and finally, the second chance is conditional. Verse 14: "Afterward Jesus found him in the temple and said to him, “See, you are well! Sin no more, that nothing worse may happen to you.”"
Jesus runs into this man in the temple. The man was previously accosted by the Pharisees because he was carrying his mat on the Sabbath. They wanted to know who healed him. Of course, they knew that it was Jesus but somehow Jesus slipped away. You can imagine that there was a great crowd because this was a holiday (see verse 1). Jesus says to the man, "you are (you have become) well!..." In modern vernacular, "hey brother, you are looking great!" The verb "become" is in the perfect tense meaning that the healing that was performed at the pool continued into the present i.e. the effects were still evident. Then Jesus gets to the root of this man's issues. He says, "sin no more, that nothing worse may happen to you." The verb "sin" is present imperative. This is not an option, it is a command. What this says is that the man's condition was caused by some sin that was in his life. As a point of clarification, not all problems and issues are the result of personal sin. We live in a fallen world where bad things happen to good people and sometimes the ones that deserve the bad seem to escape punishment. But sometimes, we make our own bad weather- and then we have the nerve to complain about it!
Jesus running into this man at the temple raises this question: When Christ picks us up from our sin, do we continue to walk in the light or do we go back to the pool? Jesus says sin no more! Paul says that we are to "press" or "aggressively pursue" the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ. He also tells us in Ephesians 4:22 that we are to "put off" the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts. These things imply that we are to exert some effort in maintaining our walk with Christ. When the Holy Ghost convicts, we are to put off the old man. When we know when there is some sin in our lives that is putting separation between us and God (Isaiah 59:1,2), we need to be ruthless about eradicating that sin and even more ruthless in our pursuit of Jesus! This is an active, Holy Ghost driven walk and we have to surrender to the Holy Ghost every day. Author Jerry Bridges calls it "dependent responsibility". We are dependent on the Spirit of God to give us the ability to carry out God's will and we are responsible for doing so.
Sin no more so that nothing worse happens to you. What does this mean exactly? Well, let's just say that there is a place that a whole lot worse than sitting at the pool getting stepped over. On another level, this pool is a picture of fallen, broken humanity. Just like the pool was surrounded by those that were sick, humanity is sick with sin. Before we met Jesus, we were all paralyzed, impotent, invalid and broken down by the effects of sin. We have all been on a mat of self-pity! We've all excused our sin away at some point in our lives. But if you are saved, that means that Jesus came to the pool that you were hanging out at and spoke a word and asked simply, "Do you want to get well?" Thank God, those of us that are saved answered in the affirmative. If anyone is reading this and you are still on your mat, still sitting by the pool, unwilling to make an effort to get in, Jesus will meet you right where you are! It doesn't matter how long you've been there on the mat, how long you've been sitting by the pool or how many folks have gone in front of you...you can be made whole! Jesus can give you the same thing that He gave this man, an immediate healing in the Spirit. Your physical issues might remain but, upon accepting Christ as your Savior, you are immediately made a new creature in the Spirit! If you haven't yet, take advantage of the second chance that God offers to us all through His Son, Jesus Christ! Grace and peace.
In John 5, there is a very familiar story about a man at the pool of Bethesda. The man had been there for 38 years on a mat. This pool was sometimes troubled by an "angel of the Lord" such that anyone that got into it during the time of the "troubling" was healed, no matter what was wrong with them. John recounts the story of this man and how Jesus gave him a second chance.
One day, Jesus came to the pool and to this man specifically and asked him a very pointed question: "Do you want to be made well?" What we see here is Jesus, God incarnate, was unafraid to confront sin and sin's effects. Jesus always went to the heart of the matter- he never treats the symptoms, he always attacks the root. Here is Jesus at Bethesda, the "house of mercy" where all of the sick people were. I can see a scene in my mind of this being a place where the castaways of society were; an ancient "skid row" if you would. We see our Lord meeting this man where we was! Jesus will do the same thing for us. He will meet us where we are because He totally understands the depravity of man and the pervasiveness of sin.
Let's analyze this man's second chance and let's see what God is saying to us through this scripture.
First of all, we see that the second chance is personal. Verse 6: "When Jesus saw him lying there and knew that he had already been there a long time, he said to him, “Do you want to be healed?”"
Jesus asked point blank, "Do YOU want to be healed?" Let's analyze this. Jesus knew of this man’s condition and how long he had been sick. The verb "want" or "desire" depending on the translation is written in the active voice in the Greek text. It would be up to the man to accept what Jesus was offering. He would have to be an active participant in what was happening, not a bystander. It was up to the sick man to make a move. If we put ourselves in the place of this man, every one of us has been here and we've had mixed results. Sometimes we have willingly accepted what God was offering and sometimes we have waffled. What Jesus was saying to this man is this: Do you want a second chance?
Secondly, the second chance is immediate. Verse 7-9 "The sick man answered him, “Sir, I have no one to put me into the pool when the water is stirred up, and while I am going another steps down before me.” Jesus said to him, “Get up, take up your bed, and walk.” And at once the man was healed, and he took up his bed and walked."
Ok, so Jesus asks, "Do you want to be healed?" This man offer up a litany of excuses as to why he's never been in the pool! People have stepped over me, no one will help me, blah, blah, blah. Notice he says "while I am going" in verse 8. In other words, he's been on his way...for 38 years. Now, pardon me for seeming insensitive, but this guy has been here for 38 years and he is obviously close enough for folks to step over him and enter the water. What this man has is what many of us suffered from before we met Jesus. He has an "on my way" mentality. You know, "I'm on my way to church." "I will come next week, but I can't make it this week...I don't have a ride." "I'll get saved tomorrow..." "I know that grandma is praying for me so I'm good..." Blah, blah, blah. This man made excuses. If he had moved a foot per year, he could have at least gotten to the point where he could have dipped his finger into the water. There had to be someone that brought him food and water every day. He had to have a caretaker somewhere that could've gotten him to the pool, IF he really wanted to get there.
Jesus, in response to this story about who did what, did not even give it a second thought. He simply said: "Get up, pick up your mat and walk." GET UP! Stop building monuments made up of empty excuses and get up! Stop looking for the angel when the Lord is standing right next to you, get up! Verse 9 says that the man got up "immediately". I give him credit here because he was obedient to the command of the Lord and he got up! He didn't think twice about it. Contrary to many "preachers" who beat this man up for not having faith...he actually had to have faith to respond to the offering of Jesus here!
Every healing that Jesus performed had immediate results. Can we take this further, if this man represents the power of sin over one's life and the power of sin to paralyze us; his healing represents the immediate cleansing and salvation that comes from accepting Jesus! Once we accept Christ, His righteousness becomes our righteousness. We are redeemed from the power of sin. We are free from the bondage of sin and we are able to walk when before we were crippled by sin's effects!
Thirdly and finally, the second chance is conditional. Verse 14: "Afterward Jesus found him in the temple and said to him, “See, you are well! Sin no more, that nothing worse may happen to you.”"
Jesus runs into this man in the temple. The man was previously accosted by the Pharisees because he was carrying his mat on the Sabbath. They wanted to know who healed him. Of course, they knew that it was Jesus but somehow Jesus slipped away. You can imagine that there was a great crowd because this was a holiday (see verse 1). Jesus says to the man, "you are (you have become) well!..." In modern vernacular, "hey brother, you are looking great!" The verb "become" is in the perfect tense meaning that the healing that was performed at the pool continued into the present i.e. the effects were still evident. Then Jesus gets to the root of this man's issues. He says, "sin no more, that nothing worse may happen to you." The verb "sin" is present imperative. This is not an option, it is a command. What this says is that the man's condition was caused by some sin that was in his life. As a point of clarification, not all problems and issues are the result of personal sin. We live in a fallen world where bad things happen to good people and sometimes the ones that deserve the bad seem to escape punishment. But sometimes, we make our own bad weather- and then we have the nerve to complain about it!
Jesus running into this man at the temple raises this question: When Christ picks us up from our sin, do we continue to walk in the light or do we go back to the pool? Jesus says sin no more! Paul says that we are to "press" or "aggressively pursue" the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ. He also tells us in Ephesians 4:22 that we are to "put off" the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts. These things imply that we are to exert some effort in maintaining our walk with Christ. When the Holy Ghost convicts, we are to put off the old man. When we know when there is some sin in our lives that is putting separation between us and God (Isaiah 59:1,2), we need to be ruthless about eradicating that sin and even more ruthless in our pursuit of Jesus! This is an active, Holy Ghost driven walk and we have to surrender to the Holy Ghost every day. Author Jerry Bridges calls it "dependent responsibility". We are dependent on the Spirit of God to give us the ability to carry out God's will and we are responsible for doing so.
Sin no more so that nothing worse happens to you. What does this mean exactly? Well, let's just say that there is a place that a whole lot worse than sitting at the pool getting stepped over. On another level, this pool is a picture of fallen, broken humanity. Just like the pool was surrounded by those that were sick, humanity is sick with sin. Before we met Jesus, we were all paralyzed, impotent, invalid and broken down by the effects of sin. We have all been on a mat of self-pity! We've all excused our sin away at some point in our lives. But if you are saved, that means that Jesus came to the pool that you were hanging out at and spoke a word and asked simply, "Do you want to get well?" Thank God, those of us that are saved answered in the affirmative. If anyone is reading this and you are still on your mat, still sitting by the pool, unwilling to make an effort to get in, Jesus will meet you right where you are! It doesn't matter how long you've been there on the mat, how long you've been sitting by the pool or how many folks have gone in front of you...you can be made whole! Jesus can give you the same thing that He gave this man, an immediate healing in the Spirit. Your physical issues might remain but, upon accepting Christ as your Savior, you are immediately made a new creature in the Spirit! If you haven't yet, take advantage of the second chance that God offers to us all through His Son, Jesus Christ! Grace and peace.
Thursday, June 13, 2013
The Devil in Disguise
You
know, my pastor gave a really excellent bible study on last night and it really
sparked a thought that I want to share here.
Satan is a master of disguise.
The bible says in 2 Corinthians 11:4 that he disguises himself as an
angel of light. The Greek word for “disguises”
is metaschématizó meaning to change
the outer appearance. The devil wants
more than anything to be validated and believed so he changes shape and form to
try and fit in. As Christians we need to
be wary and vigilant as it relates to allowing Satan to use us to validate
him! Satan even sought validation for
his sick rebellion by trying to get Jesus to worship him in the wilderness (see
Luke 4).
Let’s
look at a scripture here in 1 Samuel 13 and walk through it so that you can see
what I mean. Before we look at the
scripture, let’s set it up: The context
for this particular passage is a royal split.
Rehoboam (son of Solomon) is on the verge of having the unified kingdom
ripped away from him. Solomon’s sin
coupled with his son’s insolence led to a split in the kingdom. While unified under Solomon, God’s punishment
was that the kingdom would be taken away from his son and eventually split in
two. Judah and Benjamin made up the
Southern kingdom (Judah) and the other ten tribes (Joseph, Levi, Dan, Napthali,
Issachar, Gad,
Asher, Simeon, Zebulun, Reuben) tribes made
up the Northern kingdom (Israel).
God
sent a prophet to speak out against Jeroboam who eventually took over as king
of the Northern kingdom (for more scripture regarding the split of the kingdoms
see 1 Kings 12; 2 Chronicles 10-12). Jeroboam was terrible. He called his own priests, built a counterfeit
temple and worshipped idols. Although
unnamed in scripture, the first century historian Josephus knew this story and
attached a name to the prophet in this story.
His name was Jodan. God gave Jodan
specific instructions on how to deal with Jeroboam and what to say (1 Kings
13:1-3). When Jeroboam got upset with
the prophet, he stretched his hand out against him but God shriveled Jeroboam’s
hand and at the same time the sign that the prophet promised as fulfillment of
his prophecy (altar split and ashes poured off of it) occurred.It gets interesting after the prophet heals Jeroboam’s withered hand. Jeroboam invites the prophet into his home but the prophet refused, citing God’s specific instruction (1 Kings 13:7-10):
“’The
king said to the man of God, “Come home with me for a meal, and I will give you
a gift.” But the man of God answered the king, “Even if you were to give me half
your possessions, I would not go with you, nor would I eat bread or drink water
here. For I was commanded by the word of
the Lord: ‘You must not eat bread or drink water or
return by the way you came.’ ” So he
took another road and did not return by the way he had come to Bethel.”
God’s
instructions were clear. Don’t take
anything from anyone, don’t eat any bread, don’t drink any water and don’t go
home the same way that you came. This
was God’s direct word to the prophet Jodan.
It should have been settled and sealed.
With this in mind, let’s turn our attention to the second part of this
story and let’s see how Satan counterfeits himself, deceives us and in the
process causes destruction in our lives.
As the
prophet is on his way back to Judah, there were some “spies” there at the
temple who went home and reported what they saw to their father. Their father just happened to be a “prophet”. I put that in quotes because this old, dried
up man was as fake as a 3 dollar bill.
After the report of his sons, he asks them to saddle the donkey so that
he can go out and meet the prophet from Judah (1 Kings 13:11-13).
“Now
there was a certain old prophet living in Bethel, whose sons came and told him
all that the man of God had done there that day. They also told their father
what he had said to the king. Their
father asked them, “Which way did he go?” And his sons showed him which road
the man of God from Judah had taken. So he
said to his sons, “Saddle the donkey for me…”Historians say that this prophet was bedridden but he got up when he heard that one of God’s true prophets was in town. Worst of all, when he found Jodan the prophet he had two missions…1. to deceive him and 2. to boost his own credibility at the expense of Jodan’s life.
Let’s take a look at verse 13b-19:
"And when they had saddled the donkey for him, he mounted it and rode after the man of God. He found him sitting under an oak tree and asked, “Are you the man of God who came from Judah?” “I am,” he replied. So the prophet said to him, “Come home with me and eat.” The man of God said, “I cannot turn back and go with you, nor can I eat bread or drink water with you in this place. I have been told by the word of the Lord: ‘You must not eat bread or drink water there or return by the way you came.’ ” The old prophet answered, “I too am a prophet, as you are. And an angel said to me by the word of the Lord: ‘Bring him back with you to your house so that he may eat bread and drink water.’ ” (But he was lying to him.) So the man of God returned with him and ate and drank in his house."
Look at
this very carefully. The old prophet
tried to get Jodan to come with him. I
wondered why and then it hit me. If he
could get Jodan to his home, he would have instant credibility in the eyes of
those who viewed him as a false prophet.
Surely they had either heard or seen what happened with Jeroboam in the
temple. The devil is crafty. This happens every day. Fake preachers try to sneak in to
unsuspecting churches and sit in the same pulpit as reputable pastors in order
to boost their own stock with men; Unrepentant
friends, who have no intention of repenting, like to hang around and corrupt their
Christian friends that are actually trying to live a holy life; Drug dealers
donate huge sums of money to churches (I have seen it happen) in order to
connect themselves with that church and somehow come across as a “Robin Hood”
of sorts. Satan wants to sneak in to
validate himself and in the process discredit us!
When he
couldn’t flip Jodan initially, he went into his religious spiel and said that
he was also a “prophet” and that an angel told him to bring Jodan
home and give him bread and water. All
he did was repeat what Jodan had already said!
He didn’t know anything, only what he heard. Here is a wonderful opportunity to discredit
the devil. Many times we give him too
much credit. We think he knows
everything but in reality, he only overhears.
God is the only omniscient being in the universe. See, the old prophet wrapped his lie in the
truth. Many folks get duped every day by psychics
and false prophets, who are fed your personal information that you give to an
operator (which gets fed to them) while on hold. E. Bernard Jordan and his son Manasseh come
to mind here (NOTE: as I type this,
there is a commercial on TV for California Psychics…thanks for the confirmation
Holy Ghost). They use loaded questions
and wait for you to answer and piggy back of what you tell them. Ms. Cleo (Call me now!) was a fraud and every
one of these “palm readers” is just faking.
Even if the old prophet heard from an angel, the angel’s word would not
have contradicted God’s word!There is also something to be said here for the faith of the prophet Jodan. He was obviously not very confident in God’s command to him to forego eating and drinking there in Israel. He went against God’s word because he was subtly duped by this older, slicker and more experienced false prophet. Does this not scream Ephesians 4:14? the old prophet blew in a new wind and Jodan was tossed by it, never once testing this "new revelation" in light of what God had already said. To further illustrate the point of Satan wanting to be validated, the older prophet, after Jodan was killed by a lion for disobeying God, knowing that Jodan was a true prophet and asked to be buried next to him!
Verse 31,32: “After burying him, he said to his sons, “When I die, bury me in the grave where the man of God is buried; lay my bones beside his bones. For the message he declared by the word of the Lord against the altar in Bethel and against all the shrines on the high places in the towns of Samaria will certainly come true.”
Here is how the devil works. He lures you in, he discredits you, he causes destruction and then moves on to the next victim. This old prophet was the reason for Jodan being killed and yet asked to be buried next to him! I guess he wanted everyone to say at his death, “he was a good man; he is buried next to a true man of God”. My advice is this: 1. IF God has spoken to you, anything else that comes from Him will be confirmation, not contradictory. 2. Be confident in God’s word and do not waver from it, even if there is an angel (i.e. a pastor, a religious man/woman- you know how we get lured in when we think someone is "spiritual") to tell you something new! Satan was an angel so it’s obvious that they aren’t to be trusted over the Lord, if the Lord has spoken FIRST! [NOTE: Gabriel announced to Mary the birth of Jesus- this was received initially from an angel, not after an initial word from God. Daniel received the answer to his prayer from Gabriel, who spoke FROM God to Daniel] 3. Do not allow a counterfeit to hang on to you or use you to validate himself/herself. I am not advocating not associating with “sinners” i.e. those that are actively engaged in unapologetically sinful lifestyles [yes we are all sinners] because you might be the only way they hear the gospel. Jesus ate with “sinners and tax collectors” and he calls us to be light and salt in a dark world. But I am talking about those people that are not even trying to do what’s proper in God’s sight and have no intention of getting saved, repenting....nothing! The ones that use you as their lucky rabbit’s foot thinking that some blessing might fall their way if they just hang with you! That might happen but it won’t happen very often!
Be sober and
alert because our adversary, the devil, roams around like a roaring lion
seeking whom he may devour! Keep your
discernment at a maximum (Hebrews 5:14) and always be ready to test the spirit to see if it is
from God (. May God’s grace and peace be
upon you.
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Wasted Energy
Just a short thought and a question. Are you a digger or a multiplier? The question comes from the passage of scripture listed below:
Matthew 25:14-18: “For it will be like a man going on a journey, who called his servants and entrusted to them his property. To one he gave five talents, to another two, to another one, to each according to his ability. Then he went away. He who had received the five talents went at once and traded with them, and he made five talents more. So also he who had the two talents made two talents more. But he who had received the one talent went and dug in the ground and hid his master’s money.
Let's put this in perspective before answering the question. Jesus is telling parables about the end times and what it will be like when He returns to the earth. Jesus uses many analogies but they all have the same themes, "will you be ready when the Master returns?" and "what have you been doing while the Master was away?" Pretty simple stuff but it is amazing at the way that human beings procrastinate when there is no tangible urgency to our current situations. There is the prevailing sentiment that I can get to that later or "it can wait."
So we see here in the above parable that a master had three slaves. The master was going on a long trip (can you see the symbolism of Christ being here, making disciples and then ascending back into heaven i.e. taking a long trip?) and he gave each of the slaves some "money" to invest. It is not known when the master will return but he gave them orders, according to the passage in Luke 19 that mirrors this story, to "engage in business until I return." He gave "his property" to them with the expectation that they would invest and multiply it.
Notice something else, the master knew about the character of each one of his slaves. It is recorded that each slave was given "according to his own ability." Here is where we can see the grace of God. God is not going to ask anyone to do anything that they are ill equipped to do. Yes, he will give the Holy Spirit to empower us but each of us has our own natural ability and God sometimes works within that ability to accomplish His will on the earth. Does He sometimes supersede our natural ability and use ordinary folks to do extraordinary things? Absolutely. The bible is a compilation of God doing just that for thousands of years and He still does that today. God allowed Moses to overcome his speech impediment. God allowed Gideon to overcome his insecurity. God allowed Peter to overcome his pride.
But God also works within the confines of our natural abilities and use those abilities (ones that He gave us anyway) to accomplish His will. He used Paul's intelligence, his knowledge of the Law and his skill with reasoning to make him an emissary to the Gentile (e.g. Greco-Roman) culture and knew that Paul was able to use the same logical reasoning paradigm that the scholars of the day used; except Paul used their logic against them and was a great theologian and a masterful writer who reasoned that there was nothing else except for Christ and him crucified. The disciples were fishermen and Jesus used that vocation to allow them to understand that they were to be fishers of men. What I am trying to say is this: God knows what we are capable of and He will not overburden us or overwhelm us by charging us with a task that we are incapable of handling. As the old church says it, 'God won't put more on us that we can bear'.
Now, let us consider each slave. The two slaves that received 5 and 2 talents, respectively, each set about the master's work. They had no worries about his return date and they did not take into account that they probably had time to goof off before going to work and investing the talents. The Bible says that they set to work "immediately" and because of their obedience and their ability to work, they each doubled what the master gave them. Then there was the slave that was given one talent. He did not do anything except he immediately dug a hole in the ground and hid the talent. There is a problem here. Have you ever considered how much energy is expended in digging a hole? The energy spent there could have easily been spent "trading" or investing his master's property.
Considering the nature of this parable and the message Christ was trying to convey, we have to understand that Jesus/God is the Master of the story and we are the slaves (i.e. disciples- Paul and James considered themselves bondservants of the Lord Jesus Christ (Romans 1:1, James 1:1). This doesn't contradict the scripture in John 15 where Jesus says that the disciples are no longer slaves because he was speaking in terms of their knowledge of the intimacies of the Kingdom of God. Furthermore, while he was instructing them on the cost of discipleship, he used this phrase "a servant is not greater than his master" (John 15:20). So we are friends of the Lord Jesus Christ but we are also His servants as well because He is our Lord.
With that said, it is a known fact that we are masterful diggers. When God has given us a task and has even been gracious enough to give us something that we can handle and given it according to our abilities...we find every excuse in the world not to do it! We dig holes here and dig holes there when we could transfer that energy and DO what God has asked us to do. Rather than multiplying what God gives, we do not and we spend a lot of idle time doing absolutely NOTHING. That's not the intention of God when he blesses us with "his property" i.e. a gift or talent that could be used to glorify Him in the earth.
In all honesty we are probably a mix of both. Sometimes we dig and sometimes we multiply. I have been a digger before. There are things that God has asked me to do that I still feel apprehension about. I have also been a multiplier in that there are other things that I have been tasked with that I did according to what God said. We are all going to fail and fall. That is inevitable. The question is, which task occupies the majority of our time? Do we spend too much time digging? Or are we willing to do what it takes to multiply?
This story ends with the master returning and rewarding the servants that multiplied and cursing the servant that did not. This servant did not receive a "well done" nor was he considered "good and faithful" but "wicked and lazy". Those are terrible words to hear when the master returns. Someday, the Master of the Universe, the One that holds all things together by the word of His power, Jesus Christ will also return and the bible says this in Revelation 22:12 " behold, I am coming quickly and my REWARD is with me." We will be rewarded based on the works that we do in the Kingdom of God here on earth. It is my prayer that God would strengthen me to do those things that he has given me to do. I am not perfect and I fail daily but I will continue to ask God for strength! I also pray for you as you read and as you are convicted that you would begin multiplying. I was convicted by this scripture with respect to my efforts in evangelism. I have a burning desire to evangelize everyone that I meet but I don't always do it. Sometimes I let opportunities pass and I make excuses! But I pray that God would continue to give me open doors for ministry to the many people that I come across. Please pray for me and I will do the same for you. I am certain that ALL of us want to hear those words from the Master, "Well done good and faithful servant...you have been faithful over a few things, I will make you ruler over many. Enter into your Master's joy." Grace and peace.
Matthew 25:14-18: “For it will be like a man going on a journey, who called his servants and entrusted to them his property. To one he gave five talents, to another two, to another one, to each according to his ability. Then he went away. He who had received the five talents went at once and traded with them, and he made five talents more. So also he who had the two talents made two talents more. But he who had received the one talent went and dug in the ground and hid his master’s money.
Let's put this in perspective before answering the question. Jesus is telling parables about the end times and what it will be like when He returns to the earth. Jesus uses many analogies but they all have the same themes, "will you be ready when the Master returns?" and "what have you been doing while the Master was away?" Pretty simple stuff but it is amazing at the way that human beings procrastinate when there is no tangible urgency to our current situations. There is the prevailing sentiment that I can get to that later or "it can wait."
So we see here in the above parable that a master had three slaves. The master was going on a long trip (can you see the symbolism of Christ being here, making disciples and then ascending back into heaven i.e. taking a long trip?) and he gave each of the slaves some "money" to invest. It is not known when the master will return but he gave them orders, according to the passage in Luke 19 that mirrors this story, to "engage in business until I return." He gave "his property" to them with the expectation that they would invest and multiply it.
Notice something else, the master knew about the character of each one of his slaves. It is recorded that each slave was given "according to his own ability." Here is where we can see the grace of God. God is not going to ask anyone to do anything that they are ill equipped to do. Yes, he will give the Holy Spirit to empower us but each of us has our own natural ability and God sometimes works within that ability to accomplish His will on the earth. Does He sometimes supersede our natural ability and use ordinary folks to do extraordinary things? Absolutely. The bible is a compilation of God doing just that for thousands of years and He still does that today. God allowed Moses to overcome his speech impediment. God allowed Gideon to overcome his insecurity. God allowed Peter to overcome his pride.
But God also works within the confines of our natural abilities and use those abilities (ones that He gave us anyway) to accomplish His will. He used Paul's intelligence, his knowledge of the Law and his skill with reasoning to make him an emissary to the Gentile (e.g. Greco-Roman) culture and knew that Paul was able to use the same logical reasoning paradigm that the scholars of the day used; except Paul used their logic against them and was a great theologian and a masterful writer who reasoned that there was nothing else except for Christ and him crucified. The disciples were fishermen and Jesus used that vocation to allow them to understand that they were to be fishers of men. What I am trying to say is this: God knows what we are capable of and He will not overburden us or overwhelm us by charging us with a task that we are incapable of handling. As the old church says it, 'God won't put more on us that we can bear'.
Now, let us consider each slave. The two slaves that received 5 and 2 talents, respectively, each set about the master's work. They had no worries about his return date and they did not take into account that they probably had time to goof off before going to work and investing the talents. The Bible says that they set to work "immediately" and because of their obedience and their ability to work, they each doubled what the master gave them. Then there was the slave that was given one talent. He did not do anything except he immediately dug a hole in the ground and hid the talent. There is a problem here. Have you ever considered how much energy is expended in digging a hole? The energy spent there could have easily been spent "trading" or investing his master's property.
Considering the nature of this parable and the message Christ was trying to convey, we have to understand that Jesus/God is the Master of the story and we are the slaves (i.e. disciples- Paul and James considered themselves bondservants of the Lord Jesus Christ (Romans 1:1, James 1:1). This doesn't contradict the scripture in John 15 where Jesus says that the disciples are no longer slaves because he was speaking in terms of their knowledge of the intimacies of the Kingdom of God. Furthermore, while he was instructing them on the cost of discipleship, he used this phrase "a servant is not greater than his master" (John 15:20). So we are friends of the Lord Jesus Christ but we are also His servants as well because He is our Lord.
With that said, it is a known fact that we are masterful diggers. When God has given us a task and has even been gracious enough to give us something that we can handle and given it according to our abilities...we find every excuse in the world not to do it! We dig holes here and dig holes there when we could transfer that energy and DO what God has asked us to do. Rather than multiplying what God gives, we do not and we spend a lot of idle time doing absolutely NOTHING. That's not the intention of God when he blesses us with "his property" i.e. a gift or talent that could be used to glorify Him in the earth.
In all honesty we are probably a mix of both. Sometimes we dig and sometimes we multiply. I have been a digger before. There are things that God has asked me to do that I still feel apprehension about. I have also been a multiplier in that there are other things that I have been tasked with that I did according to what God said. We are all going to fail and fall. That is inevitable. The question is, which task occupies the majority of our time? Do we spend too much time digging? Or are we willing to do what it takes to multiply?
This story ends with the master returning and rewarding the servants that multiplied and cursing the servant that did not. This servant did not receive a "well done" nor was he considered "good and faithful" but "wicked and lazy". Those are terrible words to hear when the master returns. Someday, the Master of the Universe, the One that holds all things together by the word of His power, Jesus Christ will also return and the bible says this in Revelation 22:12 " behold, I am coming quickly and my REWARD is with me." We will be rewarded based on the works that we do in the Kingdom of God here on earth. It is my prayer that God would strengthen me to do those things that he has given me to do. I am not perfect and I fail daily but I will continue to ask God for strength! I also pray for you as you read and as you are convicted that you would begin multiplying. I was convicted by this scripture with respect to my efforts in evangelism. I have a burning desire to evangelize everyone that I meet but I don't always do it. Sometimes I let opportunities pass and I make excuses! But I pray that God would continue to give me open doors for ministry to the many people that I come across. Please pray for me and I will do the same for you. I am certain that ALL of us want to hear those words from the Master, "Well done good and faithful servant...you have been faithful over a few things, I will make you ruler over many. Enter into your Master's joy." Grace and peace.
Sunday, June 9, 2013
All Downhill from Here
I had a thought today while I was in service and I decided to share it here. You've certainly heard the euphemism, "It was all downhill from there", meaning that everything else that happened past a certain point was unstoppable. We can illustrate this using many scenarios. A student going into kindergarten shows up on the first day of school. They may have had some apprehension prior to coming to school, but then it happens; they meet that one friend that they will probably stay connected to for the rest of their lives. As the saying goes, it's all downhill from there- school becomes a little easier, days become more fun, lunch becomes more palatable, etc.
The thought today centered on the life of Jesus and there was a point in His life where everything was literally downhill. There was a cascade of unstoppable events that eventually led to Calvary. Let's look at the scripture in Luke 19:37:
"As he was drawing near—already on the way down the Mount of Olives—the whole multitude of his disciples began to rejoice and praise God with a loud voice for all the mighty works that they had seen..."
In context, this section of Luke 19 deals with the "Triumphal Entry" of Jesus into Jerusalem. It is quite a scene. Jesus had been doing great things throughout his ministry and this was a sort of culmination of his ministry on earth. This was a prophetic moment in that the same donkey that Zechariah prophesied in Zechariah 9:9 ("...behold your King seated on a donkey's colt...") was waiting for Jesus in the village near Bethpage and Bethany. People were praising Him, putting their coats and clothes on the ground as the donkey moved forward. They were praising God so loudly because of what they had seen and all of the miracles that Jesus performed! This moment in earthly history was the validation of the Messiahship of Jesus and there were some that did not like it. The Pharisees were trying to quiet the crowd but Jesus informed them that if the people didn't shout, the rocks would shout in their place. Undoubtedly, this gave the Pharisees an even greater desire to kill Jesus because, in their words in John's gospel: "the whole world has gone after him...".
Ironically, this occurred on the way down the Mount of Olives. When I read this, I jotted a little note in my bible that said "all downhill from here..." The life of Jesus was literally all downhill from here. This was a pivotal moment in history. Although some refused to acknowledge Jesus as Messiah, this moment was one of several in the unstoppable plan of God the Father that verified every Messianic claim that Jesus made. The donkey's significance cannot be overlooked as these men, the religious leaders, had to know the scrolls that spoke of the King being seated on a donkey's colt. That same prophecy also mentions that the king is "lowly and humble" (see above, Zech 9:9). this little trip downhill en route to Jerusalem was the beginning of the end for Jesus as it related to His earthly life. Gethsemane was at the foot of the Mount of Olives. But is was, for believers, one stop on the way to Calvary where all of our sins were forgiven. In an odd twist, Calvary or Golgotha was also on a hill but it was an upward climb that Jesus had to make to be hung from the cross. Uphill or downhill, I thank God that Jesus was the atoning sacrifice for my sins. I am glad that once the ball got rolling, He dare not stop it but was obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross. Grace and peace.
The thought today centered on the life of Jesus and there was a point in His life where everything was literally downhill. There was a cascade of unstoppable events that eventually led to Calvary. Let's look at the scripture in Luke 19:37:
"As he was drawing near—already on the way down the Mount of Olives—the whole multitude of his disciples began to rejoice and praise God with a loud voice for all the mighty works that they had seen..."
In context, this section of Luke 19 deals with the "Triumphal Entry" of Jesus into Jerusalem. It is quite a scene. Jesus had been doing great things throughout his ministry and this was a sort of culmination of his ministry on earth. This was a prophetic moment in that the same donkey that Zechariah prophesied in Zechariah 9:9 ("...behold your King seated on a donkey's colt...") was waiting for Jesus in the village near Bethpage and Bethany. People were praising Him, putting their coats and clothes on the ground as the donkey moved forward. They were praising God so loudly because of what they had seen and all of the miracles that Jesus performed! This moment in earthly history was the validation of the Messiahship of Jesus and there were some that did not like it. The Pharisees were trying to quiet the crowd but Jesus informed them that if the people didn't shout, the rocks would shout in their place. Undoubtedly, this gave the Pharisees an even greater desire to kill Jesus because, in their words in John's gospel: "the whole world has gone after him...".
Ironically, this occurred on the way down the Mount of Olives. When I read this, I jotted a little note in my bible that said "all downhill from here..." The life of Jesus was literally all downhill from here. This was a pivotal moment in history. Although some refused to acknowledge Jesus as Messiah, this moment was one of several in the unstoppable plan of God the Father that verified every Messianic claim that Jesus made. The donkey's significance cannot be overlooked as these men, the religious leaders, had to know the scrolls that spoke of the King being seated on a donkey's colt. That same prophecy also mentions that the king is "lowly and humble" (see above, Zech 9:9). this little trip downhill en route to Jerusalem was the beginning of the end for Jesus as it related to His earthly life. Gethsemane was at the foot of the Mount of Olives. But is was, for believers, one stop on the way to Calvary where all of our sins were forgiven. In an odd twist, Calvary or Golgotha was also on a hill but it was an upward climb that Jesus had to make to be hung from the cross. Uphill or downhill, I thank God that Jesus was the atoning sacrifice for my sins. I am glad that once the ball got rolling, He dare not stop it but was obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross. Grace and peace.
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